Paul
N. F. (7 June 2015)
"God’s
Wrath"
God’s Wrath
By A. W. Tozer
To understand God's wrath we must
view it in
the light of His holiness. God is holy and has made holiness
to be the
moral condition necessary to the health of His universe.
Sin's
temporary presence in the world only accents this.
Whatever is
holy is healthy; evil is a moral sickness that must end
ultimately in death.
The formation of the language itself
suggests
this, the English word holy deriving from the Anglo-Saxon
halig, hal
meaning well, whole. While it is not wise to press word
origins
unduly, there is yet a significance here that should not be
overlooked.
Since God's first concern for His
universe is
its moral health, that is, its holiness; whatever is contrary
to this
is necessarily under His eternal displeasure. Wherever
the
holiness of God confronts unholiness there is conflict.
This
conflict arises from the irreconcilable natures of holiness
and sin.
God's attitude and action in the conflict are His anger.
To
preserve His creation God must destroy whatever would destroy
it.
When He arises to put down
destruction and
save the world from irreparable moral collapse He is said to
be
angry. Every wrathful judgment of God in the history of
the world
has been a holy act of preservation.
The holiness of God, the wrath of God
and the
health of the creation are inseparably united. Not only
is it
right for God to display anger against sin, but I find it
impossible to
understand how He could do otherwise.
God's wrath is His utter intolerance
of
whatever degrades and destroys. He hates iniquity as a mother
hates the
diphtheria or polio that would destroy the life of her child.
God's wrath is the antisepsis by
which moral
putrefaction is checked and the health of the creation
maintained. When God warns of His impending wrath and
exhorts men
to repent and avoid it He puts it in a language they can
understand: He
tells them to "flee from the wrath to come." He says in
effect,
"Your life is evil, and because it is evil you are an enemy to
the
moral health of My creation.
I must extirpate whatever would destroy
the
world I love. Turn from evil before I rise up in wrath
against
you. I love you, but I hate the sin you love. Separate
yourself
from your evil ways before I send judgment upon you."
"0
Lord,
.
. . in wrath remember mercy" Hab. 3:2
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Yours in Christ,
Paul N. F.